Bitcoin's Fixed Supply
0:00
the supply of money has changed. Um, and
0:03
what Bitcoin does is it has a fixed
0:06
supply, so it's a lot easier to plan for
0:09
and it it holds its value, so there's
0:11
more incentive to hold it and so on. Uh,
0:14
which makes for a lot better economics
0:17
and uh and you wouldn't think that
0:19
something like that would affect so many
0:22
things, but it actually does.
Welcome Jimmy Song
0:29
Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast,
0:31
we welcome Jimmy Song. Jimmy is one of
0:33
the most respected voices in the Bitcoin
0:35
world and known to many as the Bitcoin
0:38
cowboy. After years in the startup
0:40
space, he made the jump into Bitcoin
0:42
early and has since become a developer,
0:44
educator, and author dedicated to
0:46
helping people actually understand
0:48
Bitcoin. He is the author of multiple
0:50
books, including Programming Bitcoin,
0:52
Thank God for Bitcoin, and Fiat Ruins
0:55
Everything. What makes Jimmy's
0:57
perspective stand out is that he does
0:58
not talk about Bitcoin simply as a
1:00
technology or an investment. He talks
1:03
about money as a moral issue, about
1:05
Bitcoin as a human rights tool, and
1:07
about sound money as a form of
1:09
stewardship. Join us as we talk about
1:11
how Bitcoin works, why it's different
1:13
from the money most of us use everyday,
1:15
and the practical first steps for people
1:17
who want to understand Bitcoin and
1:18
blockchain.
Bitcoin Cowboy Nickname
1:20
I have been following you for so many
1:22
years that it it's such a pleasure to
1:24
have you on. Um when I first bumped into
1:27
you, it was when I was trying to learn
1:29
about cryptocurrency uh and Bitcoin and
1:33
I'm sure you've seen this, but people
1:34
call you the Bitcoin cowboy. Um you've
1:37
got a lot of fun nicknames. Talk about
1:40
how you got into cryptocurrency
1:43
early on.
Jimmy's Bitcoin Journey
1:45
Yeah. So, I I got into Bitcoin back in
1:48
2011 when I uh read a story about it on
1:51
a um news for nerds website called
1:55
slasht.org. And I was working at a
1:58
startup and I saw it. I didn't know
2:01
anything about it. And uh you know, I'm
2:03
I'm a programmer by trade so that that
2:05
was how I got into it. I was part of a
2:07
startup as well. Um, and I spent the
2:10
rest of the day like figuring out what
2:11
it was. And uh, and that's how I got
2:14
into it. This is before, you know, the
2:16
cryptocurrency moniker was even a thing
2:19
because uh, back then it was just
2:22
Bitcoin. There wasn't anything else. And
2:25
uh, and yeah, the first altcoins I think
2:28
came like uh, I don't know, six or seven
2:30
months later. Um, you know, I I started
2:33
coding and contributing in 2013. I
2:37
started becoming more of a uh
2:40
personality in the space in 2017 and uh
2:43
you know started writing books and stuff
2:46
in 2018
2:48
uh and now here we are. So yeah that
2:50
that's uh
2:51
yeah it's it's been a interesting
2:53
journey.
Explaining Bitcoin Basics
2:54
For those listening that don't know what
2:56
Bitcoin is or don't understand Bitcoin
3:00
explain Bitcoin and the whole crypto
3:02
space.
3:03
Oh yeah. So, um,
3:06
yeah, it's obviously a big topic and,
3:08
uh, and something that I've, uh, I've
3:11
had to answer quite quite a few times.
3:13
Um, but, uh, but basically, Bitcoin is
3:17
digital,
3:19
um,
3:21
uh, scarce, digital, scarce, and
3:24
decentralized. Those are the three
3:26
properties that sort of make it Bitcoin.
3:28
And it's uh it's unintuitive to most
3:30
people because when they think of
3:32
something that's decentralized and
3:34
scarce, they think, "Okay, it's it's got
3:36
to be something physical like gold or
3:38
something like that." Um or they think
3:41
it's uh centralized scarce and digital
3:43
uh like, you know, um something like
3:46
coupons at at an e-commerce site or
3:49
something like that, one time used
3:50
coupons or u tickets to a concert or
3:53
something like that that you get on your
3:55
phone. Um, those are all digital things,
3:57
but they're scarce because it's
3:59
controlled by a central party. Um,
4:02
decentralized things like gold in the
4:04
physical world. Um, you know, anyone can
4:06
go and dig up. If I if I have gold in my
4:09
backyard and I dig it up, that's mine,
4:12
right? And I can sell it and and that's
4:14
totally fine. Uh something like the US
4:16
dollar though, if I go and print it in
4:18
my backyard, then I'm and I I try to use
4:21
it, people will arrest me because that's
4:25
illegal. All right, it's centrally
4:26
controlled. So for a lot of people, it's
4:28
it's a little unintuitive because it's
4:30
both decentralized, scarce, and or it's
4:34
all three of decentralized, scarce, and
4:36
digital. Um and until Satoshi Nakamoto
4:40
made Bitcoin in 2009, um we didn't think
4:43
that was possible. Anything that's
4:45
decentralized in the digital world is
4:47
like infinitely copyable, right? Like if
4:50
uh I'm sure you're familiar with like u
4:53
a music file or an EPUB or something
4:56
like that. You can copy them with
4:59
perfect fidelity and if it's digital and
5:01
decentralized, it doesn't like there's
5:04
no intuitive reason how it can be uh
5:07
scarce. Uh but you it can be scarce and
5:10
that's what um Satoshi Nakamoto figured
5:13
out with uh with Bitcoin and that's uh
5:15
that's what makes it kind of unique.
5:17
It's scarce digital and decentralized
5:19
and th those are those are properties
5:21
that we've never had in anything before
5:24
and to a large degree that's the only
5:27
it's the only thing that we know that
5:29
has those properties and all of these
5:31
other things in the cryptocurrency
5:33
industry are actually centralized. So
5:36
they're um they're sort of laring as
5:39
something that's decentralized. And uh
5:42
if if you get anything out of this uh
5:44
part of my explanation, it's that uh
5:47
cryptocurrency and Bitcoin are not the
5:49
same thing. Bitcoin and altcoins are not
5:51
the same thing. And Bitcoin is very
5:53
unique in that it is decentralized. All
5:55
of these other things have a creator,
5:57
have a foundation, have some sort of
5:59
central uh organization that determines
6:02
what the supply is. For example, uh
6:04
something like Ethereum, which is the
6:06
second most popular cryptocurrency,
6:08
uh has a uh you know, they they've
6:11
changed their monetary policy something
6:13
like 30 times. And it's not very
6:14
different than the Federal Reserve. So,
6:17
um yeah, it's uh it's decentralized
6:20
digital money. That's that's how I
6:21
describe it. And that's that's what
6:23
Bitcoin is. So when when you first got
6:26
into the space and you were trying to
6:27
understand Bitcoin, uh it was probably
6:29
confusing back then because there
6:31
weren't as many good resources, still
6:33
confusing for a lot of people now, but
6:35
you made a big jump from the startup
6:37
world. Uh and you'd been involved in
6:39
quite a few startups, at least as I
6:41
understand it. Why make the jump from
6:44
startups to being so interested in this?
From Startups to Bitcoin
6:48
Well, I I was uh kind of I I guess
6:52
blackpilled. you you could say uh during
6:55
the 2008 financial crisis. I'm sure you
6:58
remember that was a that was kind of a
7:00
big moment for a lot of people like uh I
7:04
I still remember watching on TV as uh I
7:07
think it was George W. Bush and then uh
7:09
Barack Obama right after him saying, you
7:12
know, we we need these bailouts for
7:13
banks and it's going to cost $800
7:15
billion. And you know, that doesn't
7:18
sound like that much money now. that's
7:19
like less than the market cap of uh of
7:22
Google or Facebook or and Nvidia and all
7:26
those other companies. But back then
7:28
that was just like an unfathomable
7:30
amount of money for anyone that was
7:32
around back then. It was just kind of
7:33
like $800 billion are like federal
7:36
deficits only 4 trillion. How like where
7:39
is this money coming from? And uh and
7:42
when I investigated that that was um uh
7:47
you know I I learned that it it wasn't
7:49
going to be through taxes. it was just
7:51
going to be through money printing that
7:52
it was just, you know, uh, the Federal
7:55
Reserve just creating this money out of
7:57
nothing and essentially giving these
7:59
banks a bunch of loans that, you know,
8:02
with very little collateral, uh, or it
8:05
it had collateral, but it was like on
8:07
nominal terms and stuff. And all this
8:09
stuff, uh, from 2008 kind of prepped me
8:12
for when I learned about it in 2011,
8:15
where I kind of got it right away. uh
8:18
because I had read uh you know Ron
8:20
Paul's and the Fed and uh you know
8:22
learned about monetary policy and stuff
8:24
and honestly for a lot of people that
8:26
stuff is boring and dry and they don't
8:28
really understand it but when it finally
8:30
hits you right like with inflation or
8:33
something like that then you start
8:36
asking questions and this is exactly the
8:38
rabbit hole you end up going down. It's
8:40
like why why are beef prices, you know,
8:42
double what they were before the
8:45
pandemic or some in some cases like
8:47
triple, right? Uh and you find out it's
8:50
because there's a larger supply of
8:52
money, right? That's that's all it is.
8:54
There's more money chasing the same
8:56
amount of goods. Uh the production of
8:58
beef hasn't gone up that much, but the
9:00
production of dollars has, and therefore
9:03
it's going to cost more. Um and that
9:05
that's essentially what's happening. Uh
9:07
same thing with real estate and many
9:08
other things. So, um, so I I was, I
9:12
guess, predisposed to understanding it
9:15
when I met it. And, and that's kind of
9:17
what happened. And I mean, that's not to
9:20
say that I quit the startups or
9:22
whatever. I I did more startups uh, from
9:26
on. I uh, I actually like didn't get
9:29
into the Bitcoin space until 2013, 2014.
9:33
And at one point, I had a full-time job
9:35
while, you know, doing Bitcoin on the
9:38
side. Uh and and then I joined a couple
9:41
of um different Bitcoin startups and it
9:45
wasn't until 2017 really that I you know
9:48
decided to go off on my own and uh and
9:51
try something and uh and honestly that
9:53
was one of the best decisions I ever
9:55
made.
Bitcoin vs. Fiat Currency
9:56
Wow. I I mean you talk about that
9:58
example of just there's more money
10:00
pouring in and it causes prices to go
10:02
up. It doesn't actually change the
10:03
supply. I've heard you talk about how
10:05
Bitcoin is the fix to a lot of bad
10:07
money. Uh explain why Bitcoin is
10:11
different than than what you just
10:14
explained in terms of how the US or
10:16
other countries are printing money.
10:18
Yeah. So the big thing about um fiat
10:22
currency is that it does have what they
10:25
call an elastic supply and um you know
10:29
not surprisingly it's always elastic
10:31
going outward, right? doesn't contract
10:33
very often and uh and does so very very
10:37
rarely and only for very short periods
10:39
of time. It's constantly expanding. To
10:42
give you an idea of how much it's
10:44
expanding, um the M2 money supply, which
10:47
is one measure of how much money there
10:50
is in the world, right, of a particular
10:52
currency, uh of the US dollar in 1959
10:56
was $289 billion. That was all the money
11:00
that was all the dollars that existed in
11:03
in uh in this particular uh if if you're
11:06
counting it in this particular way. Um
11:09
by 2022,
11:12
right? Uh it was some the M2 money
11:15
supply was somewhere around 22 trillion.
11:18
Okay, so it went from 289 billion to$22
11:24
trillion. That's about a 70x increase,
11:27
right? That's that's an enormous
11:29
increase. So if you had a dollar in
11:32
1959,
11:34
that dollar was it it was one over 289
11:40
billion of of the supply. But if you
11:44
kept it, then now it's one over 22
11:47
trillion of the supply. So it it's
11:50
there's way more dollars uh you know 70
11:54
times more dollars. And obviously it's
11:56
uh not just in the United States spread
11:58
all over the world. If if you know
12:00
anything about uh other countries uh
12:03
especially ones undergoing
12:04
hyperinflation they want dollars because
12:06
it's more scarce than their currency
12:08
which is even worse uh often times uh
12:11
hyperinflating and things like that. So
12:14
the uh supply of fiat currency is
12:17
elastic. The supply of Bitcoin is fixed.
12:21
It's at uh 21 million. It will never
12:24
increase and it's uh enforced by code.
12:27
It's uh and unless literally everybody
12:30
on the network agrees for agrees to
12:33
change it uh it's going to stay at 21
12:36
million. And that's uh most people get
12:39
into it for that reason because it's
12:41
something scarce. And that's uh that's a
12:44
very important property of money. And
12:46
this is why gold works so well for so
12:49
long was because the supply is actually
12:53
very difficult to increase for gold. And
12:55
historically um it has increased at
12:59
maybe 2% a year. Uh the supply of gold
13:02
uh and you know above ground gold is uh
13:05
is relatively rare, right? it it's it's
13:08
actually very difficult to go mine for
13:10
gold and the cost of mining for 1 ounce
13:13
of gold tends to uh trend towards the um
13:17
actual value of 1 ounce of gold the
13:20
those two meet. So that's what makes uh
13:24
uh Bitcoin so powerful because it's
13:26
absolutely scarce and you can predict uh
13:29
you know how much purchasing power
13:32
you're going to have with that uh and
13:34
you can plan for the future that way.
13:36
Whereas if you're holding the dollar,
13:38
it's kind of a melting ice cube. Again,
13:40
if you held since 1959, you would have
13:43
170th of the uh of the supply uh that
13:48
you had back in 1959. Uh which is why
13:51
like it used to be a big deal to be
13:53
quote unquote a millionaire uh because
13:56
that was actually a significant part of
13:58
the supply. It's it's not so much
13:59
anymore, right? Because there's so much
14:02
of a supply and all all of these uh
14:04
companies that had like trillion dollar
14:06
valuations that was unheard of even like
14:09
a decade ago. And the reason why is
14:12
because there's way more money, right?
14:15
Where way more supply of money. And
14:17
that's that's why uh you know the these
14:20
companies are worth so much and these
14:21
houses are worth so much and so much uh
14:24
and so on because the supply of money
14:27
has changed. Um and what Bitcoin does is
14:30
it has a fixed supply. So it's a lot
14:33
easier to plan for and it it holds its
14:36
value so there's more incentive to hold
14:38
it and so on. uh which makes for a lot
14:42
better economics and uh and you wouldn't
14:44
think that something like that
14:47
would affect so many things but it
14:49
actually does and I I document uh a lot
14:52
of those things in my uh in my various
14:55
books especially the latest one fiat
14:57
ruins everything. How does Bitcoin hold
14:59
value? Because when people talk about
15:01
the dollar, they often talk about how
15:03
it's tied to gold and backed by gold and
15:06
there's like an asset and obviously one
15:08
of the things that people talk about
15:10
with Bitcoin is it's just made up and
15:13
there's nothing it doesn't it's not
15:15
backed by anything. Talk about where
15:17
that uh understanding might be
15:19
misinformed or or how you view that.
Bitcoin's Value and Misconceptions
15:22
Yeah. So first of all, the US dollar is
15:24
not backed by gold. it it stopped being
15:26
backed by gold in 1971 which is 55 years
15:30
ago. And uh and the reason was because
15:34
the uh excess of the 60s essentially the
15:37
Great Society programs and the war in
15:40
Vietnam uh made it so that the US
15:44
printed way more money uh than and uh
15:48
distributed it throughout the world um
15:51
to fund those things rather than
15:53
actually tax. uh and the bill
15:56
essentially became due in the 70s and
15:58
you saw a lot of inflation in the 70s
16:01
not just in the US but all over the
16:03
world. Um but that uh that was uh Nixon
16:09
essentially uh you know untying it from
16:12
gold. It used to be that uh nominally at
16:15
least uh uh 1 ounce of gold was $35 and
16:20
that uh it was that number from 1934
16:25
uh when FDR changed it from $2067.
16:30
And the reason why he did that was to
16:32
expand the money supply so he could uh
16:35
fund all the u new deal programs and so
16:38
on because you know he didn't uh taxes
16:40
were unpopular and he he didn't want to
16:42
go down that route. So he used uh
16:45
inflation which is essentially a stealth
16:47
tax and that's uh that's what it all is.
16:50
So, um, the notion that, uh, you know,
16:56
we're backed by gold or that the US
16:58
dollar represents anything is is kind of
17:03
not the right, uh, way to view things.
17:05
It's it's actually backed by nothing.
17:06
It's it's backed by, you know, quote
17:09
unquote the full faith and credit of the
17:11
US government. But, I mean, they they
17:13
just print more money um, whenever they
17:16
need to. And uh you know the the uh
17:19
national deficit is like one of the ways
17:22
in which you can see just how much
17:24
excess that they've spent over the
17:26
years. Um but you know it's it's always
17:29
kind of printed into existence because
17:31
the Federal Reserve is the de uh lender
17:34
of last resort and you know when no one
17:36
buys the treasuries uh that that's who
17:39
ends up buying those treasuries that no
17:41
one else wants. Um and that's happening
17:43
more and more because a lot of other
17:45
countries are not buying US treasuries
17:48
instead they're buying gold right now.
17:51
Uh because the petro dollar standard
17:54
essentially ended like three or four
17:55
years ago um when uh Saudi Arabia
17:59
started selling their oil for uh the
18:03
yuan and euro. So um you know the the
18:07
entire edifice is kind of kind of
18:09
crumpling around uh the the dollar. So
18:12
this is where um Bitcoin is very useful
18:15
because it's it's absolutely scarce. Um
18:19
and you know this idea that it needs to
18:21
be quote unquote backed by something
18:23
real uh or something physical that's
18:26
unfortunately
18:28
uh a bias of people that tend to be
18:30
older and don't understand that digital
18:32
things can have value. uh you know I
18:35
mean how you you pay for Netflix that's
18:37
obviously all digital and it has value
18:39
for you uh why why you know why why
18:43
can't other things and you know younger
18:45
generations they they kind of understand
18:47
they they've bought I don't know like a
18:49
nice sword or something on a MMO or RPG
18:53
or something like that um and it's
18:56
completely digital or a skin on like
18:58
Counter Strike or something like that
19:00
they they understand that digital things
19:02
can have value so they they don't have
19:04
uh as much of uh hesitation around it
19:08
but for older people they they get
19:11
caught up on that but I would tell you
19:13
that vast majority of the US dollar is
19:16
also digital um something like uh 3 to
19:19
4% of all US dollars are physical the
19:23
other 96 95 96%
19:27
they're they're all digital you know
19:29
their numbers on in some database uh
19:32
maybe at your bank or something like
19:33
that and you know for large transactions
19:36
you very rarely you know take a suitcase
19:38
of uh $100 bills and go pay for a house
19:41
or something like that that that just
19:43
doesn't happen except in maybe
19:45
hyperinflating countries or something
19:47
like that. Um vast majority of time you
19:50
get a certified check and and give it to
19:53
the other person or do an a transfer or
19:56
something like that. It's all digital.
19:58
It's it's
20:00
not physical at all. It's not backed by
20:02
anything. So, like, yeah, I that's
20:05
that's how the world works already. It's
20:07
it's just uh people kind of have a
20:11
special case for Bitcoin because they
20:12
it's new and they don't understand it
20:14
and they want to figure figure out
20:16
what's wrong with it or something like
20:18
that.
Money as a Moral Issue
20:19
Well, it's it's helpful to have that
20:20
understanding. One of the things that I
20:23
that drew me to your content was how you
20:26
talk about money regardless of Bitcoin
20:28
or US dollars or any currency. how you
20:32
talk about money and how it's really a
20:34
moral issue. Uh talk about how you kind
20:38
of went down that path and realized that
20:40
money is a moral issue versus just
20:44
money.
20:46
Yeah, I money is a moral issue. And uh
20:49
usually when uh Christians talk about
20:52
money, it's it's about what you're doing
20:55
with it, right? They they see it as sort
20:57
of like this uh morally neutral tool.
21:00
And the only thing that matters is what
21:02
you actually do with the money itself.
21:04
So if you're using dollars to um I don't
21:08
know create a well in Africa, that's a
21:10
good thing. But if you're using dollars
21:12
to go hire a prostitute or uh you know
21:15
buy drugs or uh gamble or something,
21:17
then then then it's bad. And that's the
21:19
only sort of relationship money might
21:22
have with morality. uh but actually if
21:25
you if you look back at uh you know
21:27
Christian history and uh read the
21:31
analysis of a lot of uh a lot of
21:34
Christian intellectuals throughout
21:35
history I mean like going way back um
21:38
you know Nicolme who's a who's a French
21:42
bishop from the 13th century
21:45
um wrote about
21:48
uh wrote about money and the production
21:50
of money and whether uh you know that
21:52
was ethical or not. And back then, the
21:54
way that money uh inflated was through
21:58
debasement. So, you would have a coin
22:00
that was made out of metal and uh and
22:03
you know, it it would say, I don't know,
22:05
some like 1 ounce of silver or something
22:07
like that. And uh and by the way, this
22:09
is why almost every unit of money is
22:12
like a unit of weight. It used to be
22:15
that um uh you know, something like LRA,
22:18
pound, shekele, these are all units of
22:21
weight. And that's how much metal was
22:24
supposed to be in a particular coin.
22:26
When when you had a temple shekele, it
22:28
was literally a particular weight of
22:31
silver. And that's that's what the coin
22:33
represented. Now, if you're a sovereign,
22:36
if you're a king or something like that,
22:38
uh you you you issue these coins saying
22:41
this this has this much weight in it.
22:43
But uh the temptation was always to you
22:46
know take these and instead of putting
22:49
that much it's supposed to have like one
22:52
uh one pound of silver in a particular
22:56
coin or something like that. Instead you
22:59
reduce it uh right and put half a pound
23:02
of silver and put half a pound of some
23:05
other metal and just uh you know but it
23:08
still says one pound or something like
23:10
that. That is what the basement was,
23:13
right? And this was something that a lot
23:15
of kings did. And Nicolola Resme in in
23:19
the 13th century wrote about how that is
23:22
just straight up theft and it's deceit
23:24
and it's wrong and the money itself is
23:28
immoral if you're doing that right. Uh
23:30
and uh now with something like metal,
23:34
it's uh it's actually kind of costly to
23:36
do. You have to melt it down, recast it,
23:38
and do all this other stuff. uh with
23:42
digital fiat money, right? Uh the
23:45
at least the system that we have now, it
23:48
is infinitely easier cuz it is literally
23:51
just pressing a button. It's you don't
23:53
you don't you don't even have to print
23:54
paper. Um you you can do it really
23:58
really easily. And um that's what we
24:01
talk about in thank God for Bitcoin is
24:03
is the morality of the moni monetary
24:06
system itself. If if it's got a lot of
24:10
vulnerabilities, if it's got this uh way
24:14
to abuse it very very easily,
24:17
then the system itself is kind of
24:19
immoral, right? And and it it it's uh it
24:24
it's leading you to unrighteousness in
24:27
ways that uh other systems might not.
24:29
So, you know, if if you have um a system
24:34
that does make immoral behavior much
24:38
much easier, then it's a worse system
24:40
than one that makes it more difficult.
24:43
And that's essentially why we argue that
24:45
Bitcoin is a more moral money because it
24:48
makes cheating, right, stealing, all of
24:52
those things much much more difficult uh
24:55
than than in a fiat system, which is
24:58
where people are stealing and they don't
25:00
even know it, right? Like
25:01
the fact that you can take out a
25:03
mortgage uh current I think 30-year
25:06
mortgage rates are five or 6% somewhere
25:09
around there. That is a very very low
25:12
rate. And you have to ask yourself why
25:15
why are the rates so low? Because if you
25:17
think about it, who's on the other side
25:19
of that trade, right? Who is willing to
25:23
loan you half a million dollars for 30
25:26
years at 6%. Like who's making that
25:30
investment? If you know anything about
25:32
investing, that is a terrible return.
25:34
the term is too long, the amount too
25:36
high and you know the interest rate not
25:39
high enough. Um like the hurdle rate
25:42
right now is at least 7%. Right? Like
25:45
that that you can easily get that in the
25:47
S&P 500. You can easily get that in a
25:50
lot of real estate and stuff like that.
25:52
Why why would you do that? Why why would
25:55
you do that? And the answer is that no
25:58
one is on the other side of the trade.
25:59
The other side of the trade is the bank
26:01
printing money on your behalf. So, a lot
26:04
of people don't realize when they're
26:06
taking out a mortgage, they're actually
26:08
expanding the money supply. And who who
26:10
does that hurt? Well, doesn't hurt any
26:12
one person in particular. Hurts
26:15
everybody. Everybody's dollar is uh
26:19
reduces in purchasing power just a
26:21
little bit by you expanding the money
26:24
supply by $500,000 or whatever it is. Um
26:28
the bank makes interest on the payments
26:30
that you make. So, they they benefit.
26:32
you get access to capital at a very
26:34
cheap interest rate. And uh but who it
26:38
hurts is everybody else that's holding
26:40
the dollar. And it's not just the people
26:42
in the United States, it's people around
26:45
the world. Um a lot of people don't know
26:47
this, but one of the the the most
26:50
desirable currency in the North Korean
26:52
black market is physical US dollars. So,
26:56
there's a lot of people around the world
26:58
that hold US dollars, including people
27:00
in North Korea who are getting diluted
27:04
when you take out your mortgage, which
27:06
not a lot of people make that
27:08
connection, but it's true, right? Uh
27:10
you're you're actually stealing just a
27:13
little bit, not very much, but it's it
27:15
it adds up when you uh uh add it up over
27:18
all the different people that that are
27:20
holding the dollar. But you're stealing
27:23
from North Korean orphans, right? Like
27:25
you're you're stealing from the Nigerian
27:28
businessmen. You're stealing from
27:30
Venezuelans that are trying to
Unrighteousness in Money
0:27:33
bread, right? Like that that's that's
0:27:36
what you're doing. And a lot of people
0:27:38
don't even realize that they're doing
0:27:39
that when they're taking out these loans
0:27:41
for, you know, half a million dollars or
0:27:43
whatever. And and that's the
0:27:45
unrighteousness that needs to be rooted
0:27:48
out. And this is this is what I mean
0:27:50
when I say that it is a lot easier uh to
0:27:54
practice unrighteousness under an
0:27:56
immoral money and a lot harder under a
0:27:59
sound money under good money.
Bitcoin as Human Rights Tool
0:28:02
Well, I've heard you talk about Bitcoin
0:28:04
as a human rights tool, right? Not
0:28:06
necessarily an investment, but a human
0:28:08
rights tool. And I think it goes to
0:28:09
that. But how is it different when the
0:28:14
value of a bitcoin becomes harder and
0:28:16
harder and harder for people to attain
0:28:19
any portion of a bitcoin? Um
Egalitarianism and Bitcoin
0:28:23
how how is it that it becomes a human
0:28:26
rights tool that is inclusive more than
0:28:28
exclusive?
0:28:30
Well, I mean, the underlying assumption,
0:28:34
I think, for a lot of people that argue
0:28:36
that way is that everyone should have an
0:28:38
equal amount or something like that. And
0:28:40
it's a it's sort of taking
0:28:43
egalitarianism to the extreme, which I I
0:28:46
don't think has any biblical basis
0:28:47
whatsoever.
Scarcity and Value of Bitcoin
0:28:49
when when you're buying Bitcoin, uh you
0:28:52
when you're trading exchanging your fiat
0:28:54
money for Bitcoin, you you get some
0:28:56
amount and because of its scarcity, um
0:29:00
the value is going to hold and that's
0:29:03
all it is. It's a it's a savings
0:29:04
technology. Um now, is a person that got
0:29:08
in, you know, in 2013
Fairness in Bitcoin Investment
0:29:12
going to have more Bitcoin than somebody
0:29:14
that gets in now? Absolutely. because
0:29:17
they understood it earlier, they
0:29:19
recognized it earlier and they held for
0:29:22
all of that time. Um, is that like the
0:29:26
the sort of objection that a lot of
0:29:29
people might have is okay, is that
0:29:31
really fair, right? Uh, in some cosmic
0:29:34
way or whatever. Uh, but that's true of
0:29:37
anything, right? like I I if I got
0:29:40
something mature if I had an investment
0:29:44
in some property uh you know a hundred
0:29:47
years ago and it's uh increased in value
0:29:51
quite a bit because uh the city that I
0:29:53
bought it in was you know wasn't very
0:29:56
popular back then but is popular now.
Distribution and Morality
0:30:00
Well, I mean do people have a right to
0:30:03
you know that same land at the same
0:30:05
price that I bought it a 100 years ago?
0:30:07
That's that doesn't really make sense.
0:30:10
Uh that the distribution of things is
0:30:14
not a moral issue. That's that's just
0:30:17
people having foresight or uh
0:30:20
understanding things better. It just
0:30:22
because somebody understood it earlier.
0:30:25
I mean like the fact that somebody
0:30:27
understood it earlier or acted earlier
0:30:30
like that's just life. like that's that
0:30:34
that's not you know unfairness or uh you
0:30:38
know lack lack of egalitarianism or
0:30:41
something like that. Um so I the the big
0:30:45
thing though is that I I don't think
0:30:48
most people really understand Bitcoin,
0:30:50
right? Uh and I I suspect that's true of
0:30:52
your audience. uh and until they do and
0:30:57
once you do and a lot of people go
0:31:00
through this, you kind of get into it uh
0:31:04
a lot lot more a as the price increases
0:31:08
and you realize, oh wow, this really is
0:31:11
something that is very valuable. Uh and
0:31:15
it becomes a bigger and bigger part of
0:31:17
your portfolio until it pretty much
0:31:19
overtakes everything else. um which has
0:31:21
happened to a lot of people in the
0:31:22
Bitcoin space and that's that's uh
0:31:25
that's a you know I I I don't know if
0:31:28
there's like a moral thing uh connected
0:31:31
to that but that's just reality that's
0:31:33
that's how assets behave when they're
0:31:36
scarce.
Bitcoin as Stewardship Tool
0:31:37
Well, you talk about Bitcoin being a
0:31:39
tool for stewardship, right? And and I
0:31:41
love how you talk about it in in your
0:31:43
books and how you talk about it online.
0:31:45
A lot of people who don't understand
0:31:47
Bitcoin or who are new to Bitcoin uh or
0:31:50
really and some people really interested
0:31:52
in Bitcoin view it as gambling, right?
0:31:55
And and more like a like a digital
0:31:57
casino that's legal. Um how do you
0:32:00
balance the view of stewardship versus
0:32:02
that like gambling view that you hear
0:32:05
people talk about?
Bitcoin and Gambling
0:32:07
Yeah. And there are certainly a lot of
0:32:08
people that do use it as a gambling tool
0:32:11
and and that's very difficult to prevent
0:32:14
with money, right?
0:32:17
Uh that that's something that people
0:32:19
have been doing with any every kind of
0:32:21
money uh since since I don't know money
0:32:26
started. I think I I mean there's you
0:32:28
know Roman soldiers used to play dice
0:32:30
for money, right? like that that was
0:32:32
like a thing and you kind of see it in
0:32:35
the gospels when you know they're doing
0:32:37
that even for Jesus's clothes. It's it
0:32:40
was uh it's um it's hard to prevent. Uh
0:32:45
I will say though that the vast majority
0:32:47
of the gambling aspect of Bitcoin um
0:32:51
comes through fiat money. the loans that
0:32:54
people are able to get in the fiat
0:32:56
economy um uh you know what what you
0:32:59
call leverage is almost entirely on the
0:33:02
fiat side. So if you want to bet uh you
0:33:06
know 10x on uh you with 10x leverage on
0:33:10
Bitcoin uh that's relatively easy to do
0:33:13
only because fiat money is not scarce
0:33:16
and loans can come out of nothing and
0:33:18
that's that's what a lot of these
0:33:19
platforms allow. Uh so you can go on uh
0:33:23
you know Binance or whatever and do 10x
0:33:26
leverage and do whatever and you know
0:33:28
bet and gamble or whatever. Um but
0:33:32
that's not Bitcoin's fault. That's just
0:33:35
uh you know how people are using it. It
0:33:37
it tends to be a little more volatile
0:33:39
than other things. So that that's what's
0:33:42
attractive about the gamblers is that
0:33:45
it's a market that's open 24/7 and you
0:33:49
know they they can do it because of the
0:33:51
fiat loans that are available. But
0:33:52
that's I mean that's not something you
0:33:55
can really prevent within the within any
0:33:58
kind of monetary system. Uh and yeah the
0:34:02
the people and it's not really Bitcoin's
0:34:06
fault. It's it's within the heart of
0:34:08
man. that that part is not really
0:34:11
preventable or it I I think it would
0:34:13
greatly reduce if the fiat money aspect
0:34:15
wasn't there just because you'd actually
0:34:18
have to have the Bitcoin to do the um
0:34:22
gambling part or you would need somebody
0:34:24
to lend you real Bitcoin which would
0:34:27
incur a much higher interest rate which
0:34:29
would uh discourage them to from doing
0:34:32
that. Uh but that's that's the reality
0:34:35
of it. Uh, and I think we need to
0:34:38
acknowledge that it's more on the fiat
0:34:40
side. Anyway,
Bitcoin and Faith
0:34:41
so you've dealt a lot with Bitcoin, not
0:34:43
just from a money standpoint, but from a
0:34:45
faith standpoint. Talk about how this
0:34:48
became so integral for you and for
0:34:51
others in deepening your faith.
Bitcoin and Christian Faith
0:34:55
Well, um the big thing I've learned
0:34:58
within Bitcoin uh about my faith is that
0:35:03
uh well, so I I talk about what I do as
0:35:08
um two things. It's either orange
0:35:11
pilling Christians, which means telling
0:35:13
Christians about Bitcoin, um and Christ
0:35:16
pilling Bitcoiners, right? uh telling
0:35:19
Bitcoiners about Christ and and that's
0:35:22
purposeful because uh telling people
0:35:25
about Bitcoin or Christ actually has a
0:35:28
lot of parallels and I I don't want to
0:35:30
sound heretical or anything but
0:35:32
oftentimes like uh you know I I the way
0:35:35
I used to talk about Bitcoin with people
0:35:37
was hey you got you you really need to
0:35:39
learn about this thing it's it's like
0:35:41
this you know absolut uh you know it has
0:35:44
absolute scarcity it's digital it's
0:35:46
scarce it's decentralized eyes and it
0:35:48
it's this new financial system. It's way
0:35:51
better than the fiat one, blah blah
0:35:52
blah. And their eyes would glaze over,
0:35:55
right? They they don't know anything
0:35:57
about the monetary system and you know,
0:36:00
uh there and I would talk about it and
0:36:02
they they just sort of politely nod but
0:36:05
not know what to do about it at all. Um
0:36:09
and it got to a point where my wife
0:36:11
would be like, "Can you just kind of
0:36:12
stop talking about Bitcoin when we have
0:36:14
friends over? like they're you're kind
0:36:15
of freaking them out or whatever. And I
0:36:18
realized that wasn't the right approach,
0:36:20
right? Um after a while though, uh they
0:36:23
I I changed my approach to just being
0:36:26
like, "Hey, you know, I I I'm a Bitcoin
0:36:29
expert. This is what I do." Um you know,
0:36:32
if you're interested, ask me questions,
0:36:34
but I'm not going to talk about it
0:36:36
otherwise, right? Like I I just make it
0:36:40
clear that this is what I'm into. If you
0:36:42
have questions then then talk to me
0:36:44
about it. Um and you know the people
0:36:48
that are interested do come and find me
0:36:50
and go well you know I'm I I want to get
0:36:53
in I I don't really understand it. Well
0:36:55
here here are a couple books go watch
0:36:57
this podcast or go go do this and you'll
0:37:00
you'll understand it better. Thank you
0:37:01
so much. I bought some I started buying
0:37:03
some at this date or whatever.
Sharing Faith in Bitcoin Community
0:37:06
Um, and I found that that's an approach
0:37:09
that works pretty well for Christ as
0:37:13
well, right? And this is something that
0:37:14
I I uh started doing when I became more
0:37:18
of a a a micro celebrity within the
0:37:21
Bitcoin space is just let people know
0:37:23
that I'm a Christian, right? I and I and
0:37:27
honestly that's
0:37:29
like that it it doesn't sound like a
0:37:32
hard step but I think for a lot of
0:37:34
people it kind of is because you know
0:37:36
they're maybe in a job and they feel
0:37:38
feel like um you know it might
0:37:40
jeopardize something or get them
0:37:42
cancelled or whatever. And that was I
0:37:44
think the hesitation I had coming from
0:37:47
like the startup world or the corporate
0:37:48
world where you know saying something
0:37:51
like that just feels a little off and it
0:37:54
feels like uh you know people might
0:37:56
start attacking you or whatever. But I
0:37:58
started doing that and I found uh almost
0:38:01
the exact same dynamic where if you talk
0:38:04
about Christ and hey you have to do this
0:38:06
or whatever a lot of people eyes glaze
0:38:09
over it. They don't want to argue about
0:38:11
it. they, you know, and they just sort
0:38:13
of politely should, you know, like
0:38:15
change the conver uh ch change the topic
0:38:18
or whatever. Um, but if you let people
0:38:20
know that you're a Christian and sort of
0:38:23
live out that way, then people start
0:38:25
seeking you out because you're the one
0:38:27
that raised their hand, right? Um, there
0:38:29
might be other people that are Christian
0:38:31
within the same social circle, but they
0:38:34
don't even know that that person is a
0:38:36
Christian, so they don't they don't know
0:38:38
that's a resource available to them. And
0:38:40
then you get you get people asking you,
0:38:43
"Hey, like um I'm starting to
0:38:47
understand what Christianity is about. I
0:38:49
I agree with it morally. I'm I'm just
0:38:52
having like some intellectual like I I'm
0:38:56
not sure it actually happened. That's
0:38:57
the only part that, you know, that that
0:39:00
that's uh that I'm struggling with." And
0:39:02
you know, I'll be like, "Okay, you know,
0:39:04
you should you should go read this book
0:39:06
or you know or or this book here. here's
0:39:09
a few resources or do you want to come
0:39:11
to Bible study with me and we could talk
0:39:13
about it or hey um you know Easter's
0:39:16
coming up why why don't you check out my
0:39:18
church right like there there's so many
0:39:21
more opportunities to
0:39:23
talk about Christ in those ways when
0:39:27
people are more receptive and obviously
0:39:30
they're more self- selecting and
0:39:32
honestly it's not that difficult I feel
0:39:34
like it it's so so little risk involved
0:39:38
It's you're you're not going to heathens
0:39:40
and you know like uh you know ha having
0:39:43
the risk of your head being chopped off
0:39:45
or anything like that. It's just saying
0:39:47
hey I'm a Christian that's it. Um even
0:39:50
that is very difficult for a lot of
0:39:53
Christians. I I find that to be a little
0:39:54
bit of a shame. Uh I was there. I I I
0:39:57
understand why. Uh but doing that is uh
0:40:02
I found is extremely effective in in
0:40:05
getting a lot of people uh to ask
0:40:08
questions or h just be a resource for
0:40:11
them. And um and for me I I I've seen a
0:40:15
lot of my Bitcoin friends go from
0:40:18
hardcore atheists to like fellow
0:40:21
believers. And that's uh that's been one
0:40:24
of the most um unexpected uh blessings
0:40:29
in my Bitcoin journey is is just seeing
0:40:33
so many of them come through Christ.
Bitcoin Community Bond
0:40:34
Part of it is you do have such a strong
0:40:36
community and that's what helps make
0:40:38
those conversations easier. Um
0:40:41
why is it so tight-knit?
0:40:44
Yeah, I think um we're we're all kind of
0:40:46
oddballs in the Bitcoin space, right?
0:40:48
like we we're all like uh we're we're
0:40:52
the ones sort of asking the questions
0:40:54
that no one really wants to ask. How
0:40:56
does money actually work, right? Like uh
0:40:58
what what what's the mechanism and you
0:41:01
know is what we're doing actually good
0:41:03
or bad or how how is it affecting like
0:41:06
what what where where does inflation
0:41:08
come from and going down the rabbit hole
0:41:11
and all those things. Um, so a lot of
0:41:14
Bitcoiners tend to be first principles
0:41:16
thinkers and uh and we talk about stuff
0:41:19
that are not Bitcoin related but also
0:41:21
from first principles. So for example,
0:41:23
I'm a carnivore, right? I I only eat
0:41:26
meat and animal products. Uh, which a
0:41:30
lot of people find very curious. It's
0:41:32
like what wait what that like don't you
0:41:34
need fiber and how do you get your
0:41:36
vitamin C and aren't you going to you
0:41:39
know get scurvy or something right? Um,
0:41:41
but you know, I I've done my research. I
0:41:44
I' I've actually reasoned things out
0:41:46
from first principles and that's the
0:41:47
conclusion I came to. A lot of other
0:41:49
people in the Bitcoin space have also
0:41:51
done the same thing and have come to the
0:41:53
same conclusion. Um, and we talk about
0:41:56
that stuff, right? Uh, and it's not just
0:42:00
uh, you know, Bitcoin and the moni and
0:42:02
monetary policy. We also talk about okay
0:42:05
forms of government, you know, uh we we
0:42:08
we talk about diet, we talk about
0:42:10
exercise, we talk about family formation
0:42:13
and dating and uh and homeschooling and
0:42:16
raising kids and all that stuff. All all
0:42:19
those things are common um topics of
0:42:23
conversation among Bitcoiners uh because
0:42:26
we are sort of thinking through things
0:42:28
from first principles and figuring out
0:42:30
whe whether it's good instead of sort of
0:42:33
taking the narrative that's given to us
0:42:35
uh that uh a lot of propagandists would
0:42:38
like for us to swallow and you know
0:42:41
bitcoiners are just sort of not like
0:42:43
that. So I think there's uh definitely
0:42:46
um a strong bond that comes from
0:42:50
uh you know not being conventional if
0:42:54
you will um which I I think should be
0:42:58
the case for Christians too right like
0:42:59
we're we're thinking things very
0:43:01
differently and uh unfortunately like a
0:43:06
lot of Christianity is cultural these
0:43:08
days and I think it's
Christianity and Community
0:43:11
um
0:43:12
uh for a a lot of people it's it's
0:43:14
what's respectable um and not what's
0:43:17
true. Um and that's that's what drives a
0:43:21
lot of the bonding in a community is you
0:43:25
you actually really believe it and if
0:43:28
you have somebody that believes it next
0:43:30
to you, you know, it's uh it's a closer
0:43:33
bond than somebody that's in it more for
0:43:36
social reasons or something like that,
0:43:38
which I I think tends to happen in a lot
0:43:41
of other communities.
Altcoins and Cryptocurrency
0:43:43
Yeah,
0:43:44
you touched on this a little bit
0:43:45
earlier, but altcoins and cryptocurrency
0:43:48
as a whole, right? I know you you're a
0:43:51
big fan of Bitcoin. Um, a lot of people
0:43:53
might listening, they might think, well,
0:43:56
why doesn't somebody just create
0:43:57
Bitcoin, too, or
0:43:59
jump into all these altcoins? Can you
0:44:01
kind of explain the
0:44:03
explain the difference and just a little
0:44:05
bit more for our audience?
Centralization of Altcoins
0:44:08
Yeah. Uh so all coins are almost uh they
0:44:12
they almost always have some sort of
0:44:14
creator found uh foundation or somebody
0:44:18
that controls things and that's
0:44:20
essentially the difference. So there's a
0:44:23
there's a lot of coins that have like
0:44:26
some sort of council or somebody that
0:44:28
leads the development and can change the
0:44:30
rules at any time. Um and that's what
0:44:34
makes it centralized. And if it's
0:44:36
centralized and the rules can change,
0:44:38
then it's not actually really credibly
0:44:41
scarce in the long term. And that's what
0:44:44
makes the difference uh for uh versus
0:44:47
something like Bitcoin which is
0:44:48
decentralized and has credible long-term
0:44:51
scarcity. You could create Bitcoin 2
0:44:53
tomorrow and it might have more features
0:44:56
or whatever, but it doesn't have the
0:44:59
credible scarcity that Bitcoin has
0:45:01
because if you created it, then you can
0:45:04
probably change it, right? Like you can
0:45:06
uh you can say, "Oh, this isn't really
0:45:08
Bitcoin 2 or this is Bitcoin 2 and we're
0:45:11
we're going to change it from 21 million
0:45:13
to 42 million." uh because we're going
0:45:16
to subsidize all all these people that
0:45:19
are going to develop or all these people
0:45:22
that are going to use it as merchants
0:45:24
and all all these other people that we
0:45:27
think deserve it or or something like
0:45:29
that. And that that happens to all of
0:45:32
these altcoins is that they're they um
0:45:35
end up subsidizing different things
0:45:37
within their community or whatever.
0:45:39
There was um there was a supposedly de
0:45:42
decentralized finance protocol called
0:45:44
Arbitum that uh where you know somebody
0:45:48
hacked something and they decided we're
0:45:50
going to revert a bunch of these things
0:45:52
and uh you know return the money to the
0:45:55
rifle owner or whatever. Um that's the
0:45:58
centralization that um sounds good in
0:46:02
theory, right? This is also what happens
0:46:04
with the dollar is that if uh if
0:46:07
something goes wrong then uh then
0:46:10
there's a central authority to reverse
0:46:11
all of it. But that same power can be
0:46:14
used to print more money right steal
0:46:16
from you. And that's uh it's it's a
0:46:19
double-edged sword. There's a you know
0:46:21
what you might consider good on one side
0:46:24
is also bad on the other. And all of the
0:46:26
altcoins have are centralized and don't
0:46:30
have um this property where you you know
0:46:34
what it's going to be in the future. Uh
0:46:37
whereas Bitcoin is decentralized and
0:46:40
yeah it's it's uh it it allows you to
0:46:43
actually own your money and there's it's
0:46:46
unconfiscable. no one can take it from
0:46:49
you uh without you know like I don't
0:46:53
like like going and actually stealing
0:46:56
your seed phrase if you have it stored
0:46:57
anywhere or something like that. So um
0:47:00
it's actually self- sovereign money uh
0:47:03
like holding your gold but you know
0:47:06
someone can actually come and physically
0:47:08
take your gold. It's harder to take
0:47:10
something digital because you can put it
0:47:11
behind passwords and uh distribute it
0:47:14
and things like that. If Satoshi's
0:47:16
wallet ever gets used, right, the
0:47:19
creator of Bitcoin,
Impact of Satoshi's Wallet
0:47:22
does that kind of make everything go
0:47:24
kaputs or what happens if that if that
0:47:27
event ever happened? I'm sure you guys
0:47:29
talk about that or have talked about
0:47:31
that a lot.
0:47:32
Yeah, I mean that's uh it's
0:47:36
what what happens if China dumps all US
0:47:40
treasuries on the market, right? Like
0:47:42
that's kind of the uh the similar a
0:47:46
similar kind of issue. You you don't
0:47:48
know what a private actor is going to do
0:47:50
and you don't know how the market is
0:47:52
going to react to what the private actor
0:47:54
does. Um and that it's um you know
0:47:59
especially when there's like one holder
0:48:01
that has a significant amount of it. But
0:48:03
that's that's true of any anything in a
0:48:06
market. If if one holder has a lot of it
0:48:10
and they dump it on the market,
0:48:12
obviously the Pike's going go down, at
0:48:14
least in the short term, but uh in the
0:48:18
long term, it might be, oh, okay, it's
0:48:19
actually getting distributed to the rest
0:48:21
of the community. So, we don't have to
0:48:23
worry about this anymore. There's more
0:48:25
certainty it might go back up again,
0:48:26
right? Like,
0:48:27
it's a it's a sort of thing where it's
0:48:29
very hard to predict how um
0:48:34
how the market reacts. you you have a uh
0:48:39
have an intuition at least in the short
0:48:40
term of what will happen but uh long
0:48:43
term
0:48:45
like it it's very difficult to tell and
0:48:47
I I I would not uh believe anybody that
0:48:51
said oh this is definitely what's going
0:48:53
to happen uh Bitcoin's going to die
0:48:54
because there's going to be a million
0:48:56
more uh bitcoins out there well maybe
0:48:59
but it's also possible that there there
0:49:02
are people that want that much and would
0:49:04
buy it at market price just so they can
0:49:07
own that much and they weren't
0:49:09
interested if they had to go and
0:49:11
accumulate it over a long period of
0:49:13
time. But if they can just go get a
0:49:15
million right away, then then that's
0:49:17
something that they would be interested
0:49:19
in. You you don't you don't know what
0:49:20
other market actors there are and how
0:49:23
markets uh sort of react to those kinds
0:49:27
of things. So I yeah I I I I don't think
0:49:30
anyone knows and I don't think it's
0:49:32
really possible to know until it happens
0:49:34
but generally I think it'll it'll be a
0:49:37
long over the long term it'll be
0:49:39
positive.
Getting Started with Bitcoin
0:49:40
Yeah. Well one thing people who are
0:49:42
listening to this might not have any
0:49:44
Bitcoin or have had interest before this
0:49:47
now they want to get into it. they've
0:49:49
got they'll look up how to buy Bitcoin
0:49:52
on Google or chat or whatever
0:49:54
and they're going to see things called
0:49:56
ledgers and other things. They're going
0:49:58
to see like Robin Hood and Binance like
0:50:01
what do you encourage people who are
0:50:03
interested what like what's the right
0:50:06
way to get involved?
Buying Bitcoin
0:50:09
Well, if you want to buy Bitcoin, it's
0:50:11
pretty straightforward. There's uh you
0:50:13
know, if you have Cash App, which is
0:50:15
very similar to Venmo on your phone,
0:50:17
then you can literally buy it. I think
0:50:19
you can also buy it on Venmo even. Um
0:50:21
though they they do more altcoins and
0:50:23
stuff. You can also buy on Swan or
0:50:25
River. Uh many other exchanges.
0:50:28
Depending on where you are in the world,
0:50:30
there's probably one that's uh very
0:50:31
local to you. Uh but I I I would say
0:50:35
learn about Bitcoin first and what it is
0:50:38
uh before you move on to any of those
0:50:40
other things because uh like you
0:50:43
suggested before there are a lot of
0:50:44
people that do use it for gambling and
0:50:46
instead of as a savings vehicle which is
0:50:49
what it actually is. Uh so learning
0:50:52
about it uh you know understanding the
0:50:54
history of money and what what makes
0:50:56
Bitcoin diff different will give you
0:50:59
that conviction. Um it's uh it's a lot
0:51:02
like Christianity in that uh it's easy
0:51:05
enough to go to church and do all the ex
0:51:10
uh uh external signs of being a
0:51:13
Christian but to really develop that uh
0:51:15
that conviction you have to have a
0:51:17
relationship with God. And that's that's
0:51:20
ultimately what uh what gives you that
0:51:23
uh conviction. Uh so learn more about
0:51:25
him, spend time with him, right? Um, and
0:51:27
that's what I would encourage your
0:51:30
listeners to do is actually go and
0:51:32
understand Bitcoin. Go read some books.
0:51:33
Go watch some podcasts. Uh, um, you
0:51:36
know, I I have a few books. Uh, if
0:51:38
you're a Christian, definitely, uh,
0:51:40
thank God for Bitcoin is one that we
0:51:42
wrote specifically to Christians so that
0:51:44
they could understand that stuff. Um,
0:51:47
but there's a lot of other great intros
0:51:50
to Bitcoin. The Bitcoin standard by
0:51:52
Safina Moose is a is a classic. uh and
0:51:55
he shows it from an economics
0:51:57
perspective and it's also a pretty
0:51:59
entertaining read about the nature of
0:52:01
money and what it is and why Bitcoin is
0:52:04
different. Um there's uh you know uh the
0:52:07
bullish case for Bitcoin by VJ Boyati
0:52:09
who's another friend of mine. Uh there's
0:52:11
inventing Bitcoin for a slightly more
0:52:13
technical folks. There's uh um you know
0:52:16
so many other books too. Uh, and I like
0:52:19
there's a lot of resources like you said
0:52:21
in 2011 there really wasn't any of this
0:52:24
stuff. Uh, which which is why like the
0:52:27
people that held from there is are
0:52:31
don't number very many, right? Because
0:52:34
if you didn't really understand it, you
0:52:38
probably sold at some point. And
0:52:40
uh and that's kind of what you want to
0:52:43
prevent is to really understand it so
0:52:47
you're not uh you're continually acting
0:52:50
out on that belief rather than sort of
0:52:53
abandoning it uh at the first sign of
0:52:56
panic which happens often in Bitcoin.
0:52:58
It's uh it's dropped more than 80%
0:53:01
uh from its high like six different
0:53:04
times. So you're going to get tested
0:53:06
because of the volatility. Um, and it's
0:53:10
better if you can hold through it. And
0:53:12
that means actually developing some
0:53:14
conviction around what it is.
Rapidfire Questions
0:53:17
That's so good. Well, Jimmy, I want to
0:53:19
finish with 10 rapidfire questions and
0:53:22
you just answer with the first thing
0:53:23
that comes to mind. No wrong answer.
0:53:25
Sure.
Servant Leadership
0:53:26
Who's the first person you think of when
0:53:29
I say servant leadership?
0:53:32
Jesus.
Describing Jimmy Song
0:53:34
All right. Five words that most describe
0:53:36
you.
0:53:41
Oh man. Uh, extroverted.
0:53:44
Uh, first principles thinker and
0:53:50
um, Christ follower.
Favorites
0:53:53
All right. Favorite book or author?
0:53:56
CS Lewis.
0:53:58
Favorite food?
0:54:01
Steak.
0:54:02
Favorite thing to do in your free time?
0:54:05
Read.
Surprising Fact
0:54:06
Surprising fact about you.
0:54:10
I I I don't know what would surprise
0:54:12
people. Uh I I
0:54:16
I guess I'm a carnivore. That's There
0:54:18
you go.
Teaching and Involvement
0:54:18
I was I was going to interject for the
0:54:21
surprising fact about you. One thing
0:54:22
that I found surprising uh is that you
0:54:25
actually teach people a lot of the
0:54:26
principles. Not just like
0:54:28
all your celebrityism and like your
0:54:31
persona and like all that you talk about
0:54:32
online, but you like do hands-on
0:54:34
teaching and help people go from zero to
0:54:37
serious understanding and getting
0:54:39
involved in this space. So, I found that
0:54:41
surprising when I first bumped into that
0:54:43
and I think it's cool.
Capitalist Endeavor
0:54:44
That that was that was also like a
0:54:47
capitalist endeavor on my part, right?
0:54:49
cuz I I I wasn't doing it for free and
0:54:51
it was uh mutually beneficial which is
0:54:54
which is the ideal thing in any uh any
0:54:58
economy is where you have a win-win
0:55:01
trade where some the everybody is better
0:55:05
off as a result of that interaction.
Favorite Travel Destinations
0:55:08
All right. Favorite place you've been?
0:55:14
Tokyo.
Future Travel Plans
0:55:16
Is there anywhere in the world you want
0:55:17
to go that you have not been to yet?
0:55:20
Oh, um,
0:55:24
Moscow.
Best Advice Received
0:55:26
All right. What's the best advice you've
0:55:28
ever received?
0:55:30
Believe in Christ.
Importance of Servant Leadership
0:55:32
I love that. All right. And finally,
0:55:34
this is a podcast on servant leadership.
0:55:36
Why should people care about becoming
0:55:38
better servant leaders?
0:55:42
It makes you a better person, I think.
0:55:44
Um, it's it's very easy to if you have
0:55:48
the personality for it, it's it's very
0:55:50
easy to be a leader that's egocentric or
0:55:55
thinks they know everything. Um, I think
0:55:58
servant leadership puts you in a mode of
0:56:03
seeing
0:56:06
more what the effect that you're having
0:56:09
in the community. And ultimately that's
0:56:12
that's what you have to uh that that's
0:56:15
what
0:56:16
purifies you in a way cuz it it uh it
0:56:20
puts you in a position outside yourself
0:56:22
and helps you understand what
0:56:25
um
0:56:27
what community you're in and how that's
0:56:30
improving as a result of your
0:56:33
um efforts.
Closing Remarks
0:56:35
Wow. Well, Jimmy, thank you for being
0:56:39
with us. I I know none of this is you
0:56:41
giving financial advice or anything like
0:56:42
that, but just sharing your story and
0:56:44
and giving a lot of wisdom from things
0:56:46
you've learned. So, thank you for being
0:56:48
open and uh we're going to put in the
0:56:50
show notes some links where people can
0:56:52
go follow you and and learn more if
0:56:54
they're interested.
0:56:56
Well, thank you for having me. It was a
0:56:58
pleasure.
Podcast Outro
0:56:59
Thank you for listening to this episode
0:57:00
of the Servant Leadership Podcast. If
0:57:03
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0:57:05
it a thumbs up and leave a comment
0:57:07
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0:57:11
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0:57:15
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